Christianity isn’t a path to impartial or objective morality, nor is it supposed to be. Christianity is supposed to be the belief and trust in the risen Christ, and in all that Jesus Christ said and did.promethean75 wrote: ↑Tue Mar 08, 2022 12:23 am "So, in acknowledging this, how then are you able to determine beyond a leap of faith or a "wager", if the Christian God is the optimal [or the only] path to objective morality on this side of the grave and immortality and salvation on the other side?"
Good stuff, and once a Christian reads that, he can't unread it, and he knows he's only taking a leap.
Here's the reasoning behind the 'wager'. And really nietzsche covered this far better than I ever could. This type of person feels that the world is doomed if god doesn't exist. They need a transcendent purpose to give life meaning and goodness. They can't settle with the fact that individual lives are mortal. That life continues after they die is not enough to satisfy them. See the self-centeredness here? It's subtle, but a defining feature of the religious spirit. They are so distraught by their own mortality that it escapes them entirely that there will be generations to come that have the possibility to live lives that are relatively full of joy and happiness (provided capitalism doesn't prematurely destroy the erf). 'It's all about 'me' (Stirner calls this the involuntary egoist), and if I'm miserable without belief in god (a greater cause than myself), so too must you be' (who finds no sacred cause other than himself), the religious man reasons. At the center of this degenerate soul is a heavy sickness born out of weakness, an inability to be satiated by any modest expectations for life. As he lives his life 'in fear and trembling', he naturally expects others to also do so, and is suspicious, envious, of anyone who does not experience the same dread and anxiety as he does.
The wager is simply the surrendering of a creature unfit for life who cannot find any joy in living unless he can believe he isn't mortal. And while it's perfectly reasonable to live in fear of them, I assure you: No, Donny, these men are nihilists, there's nothing to be afraid of. These men are cowards.
Besides morality isn't objective
A judge’s position in a court of law (a set of morals agreed to) is supposed to be objective for the sake of the case, but he too is obligated to the same law and is supposed to be in agreement with it, or he wouldn't be a qualified judge. The two side arguing the justification for the judge to decide one way or the other are purely self-interest, because they are bound to the set of morals, in this case the law.
Morals are a agreement, a contract, a business agreement, a set of laws a people agree to live by, a covenant, a marriage agreement, a treaty between nations, so on and so forth, and is relative only to those in the agreement. if you betray the agreements you agree to be in then immorality is in question. Anyone outside of the agreement or not included in the agreement are not bound to the agreement. Morals are not inherent to the flesh or the nature of the beast. They are necessary for man to coexist in peace and wellbeing. Even if its within a household.
even in the case in nations where it is agreed that one can speak out against the rules within the law(agreement) one is still obligated obey that law until it is changed, because if one remain within the territory of that law then one agrees by default to honor those laws with the possibility of prosecution should one disobey.